hawkfan68
Well-known member
BB's teams have very good football discipline. They don't make many mental errors. If they do, they don't do it again and again. Players and coaches are held accountable.
He has Tom Brady.purpleneer":sq5b1sak said:What separates Bill Bellichick from other "great" coaches?.
He went 11-5 in a season without him. Part of it's the perennially weak AFC East, but Belichick is REALLY good.5_Golden_Rings":2ry54kdc said:He has Tom Brady.purpleneer":2ry54kdc said:What separates Bill Bellichick from other "great" coaches?.
That 2008 team was with a roster that went 16-0 the previous season. 2007-2008 is an exception to the rule.RolandDeschain":10379yf0 said:He went 11-5 in a season without him. Part of it's the perennially weak AFC East, but Belichick is REALLY good.5_Golden_Rings":10379yf0 said:He has Tom Brady.purpleneer":10379yf0 said:What separates Bill Bellichick from other "great" coaches?.
He's also got so many different whiffs of cheating over the years, that I'm not sure I'd ever be able to have "full respect" for him no matter how many more rings he gets, if you understand what I mean. Every couple of years, it's something new with him and that organization...
chris98251":3e5y19pc said:He was just a 6th round pick, if he was that good he would have been taken in the first round, it's the coaching![]()
You used the wrong smiley. Should have used this one: :stirthepot:chris98251":2riuw2gy said:He was just a 6th round pick, if he was that good he would have been taken in the first round, it's the coaching![]()
Maybe, but from my experience, when they change in the second half it's because they are way behind, and they just go to the hurry up... but that's where Brady calls all the plays.RolandDeschain":2riuw2gy said:I disagree that it's as much Brady as you think. New England as a team changes up at halftime better than anybody, hands down, and has for a very long time.
I'm not denigrating Brady, I just disagree on the percentage of success you award to NE overall due to Brady.
Brady was far from great for 2 1/2 quarters in 51, and while his receivers could have helped him, he had some just plain bad plays even with guys open. He easily played bad enough to lose to a mediocre Houston team playing with some real disadvantages. He wasn't good in 49, with 2 bad picks, until defensive injuries and limitations made it easy. Tom Brady is great when the opponent makes it easy by going soft and simple or just plain isn't good. If either of their last 2 SB opponents had taken advantage of being in the driver's seat, he doesn't come close to either comeback win. It's extra baffling that Pittsburgh just let him have it easy all game.5_Golden_Rings":2oxzvaa9 said:You used the wrong smiley. Should have used this one: :stirthepot:chris98251":2oxzvaa9 said:He was just a 6th round pick, if he was that good he would have been taken in the first round, it's the coaching![]()
Maybe, but from my experience, when they change in the second half it's because they are way behind, and they just go to the hurry up... but that's where Brady calls all the plays.RolandDeschain":2oxzvaa9 said:I disagree that it's as much Brady as you think. New England as a team changes up at halftime better than anybody, hands down, and has for a very long time.
I'm not denigrating Brady, I just disagree on the percentage of success you award to NE overall due to Brady.
Defense though, Brady doesn't run the defense. So maybe that's Billicheat's contribution.
Leading comebacks in the 4th quarters of SB's is the definition of greatness. It was Montana's 91 yard drive against Cinci that established his legacy, and it was Elway's last minute drive against Cleveland in an AFCC game that cemented his. In this game Brady led a 91 yard drive in the last 3 minutes of regulation to tie it (including a 2-point conversion play, plus an OT touchdown drive, plus several earlier scoring drives in the 2nd half - 31 straight points. So what were you saying again?purpleneer":1m0yz7c8 said:Brady was far from great for 2 1/2 quarters in 51, and while his receivers could have helped him, he had some just plain bad plays even with guys open. He easily played bad enough to lose to a mediocre Houston team playing with some real disadvatages. He wasn't good in 49, with 2 bad picks, until defensive injuries and limitations made it easy. Tom Brady is great when the opponent makes it easy by going soft and simple or just plain isn't good. If either of their last 2 SB opponents had taken advantage of being in the driver's seat, he doesn't come close to either comeback win. It's extra baffling that Pittsburgh just let him have it easy all game.5_Golden_Rings":1m0yz7c8 said:You used the wrong smiley. Should have used this one: :stirthepot:chris98251":1m0yz7c8 said:He was just a 6th round pick, if he was that good he would have been taken in the first round, it's the coaching![]()
Maybe, but from my experience, when they change in the second half it's because they are way behind, and they just go to the hurry up... but that's where Brady calls all the plays.RolandDeschain":1m0yz7c8 said:I disagree that it's as much Brady as you think. New England as a team changes up at halftime better than anybody, hands down, and has for a very long time.
I'm not denigrating Brady, I just disagree on the percentage of success you award to NE overall due to Brady.
Defense though, Brady doesn't run the defense. So maybe that's Billicheat's contribution.
Any real upper-level defense can handle him if they get help from their O and don't get stupid. It certainly helps that they are as willing as they are to run "trick" plays and pick spots to take advantage of potential shortcomings in the rules.
I meant exactly what I said, whatever the competition level, Brady played badly in those those games until the opponent blew it and made it easy. And Atlanta wasn't exactly a great defense but part of the deficit was a Shaub-esque pick-6 Brady threw.50yrpatsfan":1etd80e5 said:Leading comebacks in the 4th quarters of SB's is the definition of greatness. It was Montana's 91 yard drive against Cinci that established his legacy, and it was Elway's last minute drive against Cleveland in an AFCC game that cemented his. In this game Brady led a 91 yard drive in the last 3 minutes of regulation to tie it (including a 2-point conversion play, plus an OT touchdown drive, plus several earlier scoring drives in the 2nd half - 31 straight points. So what were you saying again?purpleneer":1etd80e5 said:Brady was far from great for 2 1/2 quarters in 51, and while his receivers could have helped him, he had some just plain bad plays even with guys open. He easily played bad enough to lose to a mediocre Houston team playing with some real disadvantages. He wasn't good in 49, with 2 bad picks, until defensive injuries and limitations made it easy. Tom Brady is great when the opponent makes it easy by going soft and simple or just plain isn't good. If either of their last 2 SB opponents had taken advantage of being in the driver's seat, he doesn't come close to either comeback win. It's extra baffling that Pittsburgh just let him have it easy all game.5_Golden_Rings":1etd80e5 said:You used the wrong smiley. Should have used this one: :stirthepot:chris98251":1etd80e5 said:He was just a 6th round pick, if he was that good he would have been taken in the first round, it's the coaching![]()
Maybe, but from my experience, when they change in the second half it's because they are way behind, and they just go to the hurry up... but that's where Brady calls all the plays.RolandDeschain":1etd80e5 said:I disagree that it's as much Brady as you think. New England as a team changes up at halftime better than anybody, hands down, and has for a very long time.
I'm not denigrating Brady, I just disagree on the percentage of success you award to NE overall due to Brady.
Defense though, Brady doesn't run the defense. So maybe that's Billicheat's contribution.
Any real upper-level defense can handle him if they get help from their O and don't get stupid. It certainly helps that they are as willing as they are to run "trick" plays and pick spots to take advantage of potential shortcomings in the rules.
Atlanta was a tough opponent, as you well know. So was Seattle 2 years ago. Falling behind to teams like that isn't playing badly, it's a measure of the competition.
West TX Hawk":1y23lsb6 said:Belichick:
7) Master cheater-see the SB against the Rams and much more
And I still can't stand the bastard.
RolandDeschain":38phjy3q said:I disagree that it's as much Brady as you think. New England as a team changes up at halftime better than anybody, hands down, and has for a very long time.
I'm not denigrating Brady, I just disagree on the percentage of success you award to NE overall due to Brady.
purpleneer":x1h4yz5s said:I ask this here because of where i want to go with the discussion. I also think a lot of people gloss over the relevant reasons and act like other "great" coaches just can't match his genius (or something like that).
In my eyes, there have been at least a few who could match his intellect and understanding of the game, which are undoubtedly major separation points for most, but the one thing that really puts him above the rest gets missed. Namely, he cares far less than the other guys smart enough to push him about how he wins and is willing to change his plan and buck conventional "wisdom" more.
The comeback against us wasn't much, and absolutely would not have happened if we had ignore concussion protocol like they did.ivotuk":lfpuda33 said:Nobody else but Brady could have come back like he did in the last 2 Superbowls he played. Maybe Joe Montana, but not anybody else.